How 1000 mermaid sculptures are poised to save Florida's oceans
Jan 20, 2020 鈥 3 min read
What began as a vanity project for a married couple has turned into an environmental mission for a pair of artists 漏 Ron Nash / 1000 Mermaids Artificial Reef Project
The next time you go diving off the coast of Ft. Lauderdale, keep an eye out for mermaids. The 1000 Mermaid Artificial Reef Project is a bio-productive EcoArt project and tourist diving destination that hopes to call attention to the disappearing Florida reefs and help rebuild them.
Florida is the only state in the continental United States with extensive shallow coral reef formations near its coasts. They're expansive, making up the third-largest reef in the world. And unfortunately, they鈥檙e dying at higher rates than other iconic reefs like Australia鈥檚 Great Barrier Reef 鈥 over 90% in recent decades.
With the, ocean lovers and body cast artists Ernest Vasquez and Sierra Rasberry hope to turn that around.
The idea for the project came when the artists were commissioned to make a sculpture of a client鈥檚 wife as a mermaid for his yacht. But when it came time for the piece to be delivered, there was no yacht to receive it.
鈥淚 have bad news,鈥 the couple recall their client saying. 鈥淚 lost my business, I lost my boat, I lost my wife.鈥
Not only that, he was sentenced to federal prison. When Vasquez inquired about what was to be done with the mermaid sculpture the client replied, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 care, throw it in the ocean.鈥
And that鈥檚 when the light bulb went off.
Mermaids for the reef project are individually handcrafted out of sustainable concrete by Vasquez and Rasberry with their company Miami Body Cast, and sit on coral reef modules made by , which uses eco-friendly materials in reef shapes to encourage corals and other sea creatures to attach themselves. Coral Lok frag plugs allow living coral to be immediately attached to the man-made reef.
鈥淭he Coral Loks could potentially be the key to saving the coral reefs,鈥 says Evan Snow, Project Manager & Executive Director of the 1000 Mermaids Artificial Reef Project. 鈥淏ecause the current method, they have to use a nail and a zip tie and epoxy to put the fragments back onto the ocean floor. And they can only do so many on one tank of air. This allows us to deploy more of these super corals faster, easier, with safer materials than ever before.鈥
After consulting with scientists, local governments and the Army Corps of Engineers, the project made its of 18 sculptures in August of 2019, the first step in creating an eco-friendly dive site that also diverts traffic away from the natural reef, allowing it time to heal. The artificial reef also helps to promote marine wildlife, expand fishery populations and act as a natural reef would to protect the coast from destructive waves.
But there鈥檚 still a ways to go, and public participation is encouraged. Casting of mermaids starts at $7,500USD. The project also accepts donations of money, resources, time and airline miles, so the 1000 Mermaids Artificial Reef team can attend and present their ideas to leading reef experts at the 14th in Germany this July.
鈥淥ne of our lines is, we鈥檙e using art as a problem-solver,鈥 says Snow, who foresees being a part of this project for the rest of his life. 鈥淎nd yes, we are going for 1,000 mermaids. Ten would have been so little, 100 would have been attainable. We thought 1000 was kind of like an infinite number.鈥
Explore related stories
- Sustainable TravelThe best train rides in Europe: 10 amazing journeys for 2024
Jan 16, 2024 鈥 8 min read
Sustainable TravelThe 鈥渨orld鈥檚 longest bus trip鈥 covers 22 countries in 56 days. Think you could handle it?Mar 29, 2023 鈥 4 min read
- Sustainable TravelExploring Gothenburg鈥檚 sustainable side: a green weekend itinerary
Jul 26, 2022 鈥 7 min read
Sustainable TravelEurostar is connecting more European cities by high-speed railApr 28, 2022 鈥 2 min read
National ParksThe biggest rewilding project in the UK will restore vanishing ecosystems in the Scottish HighlandsSep 30, 2021 鈥 3 min read
- Sustainable TravelStroll through the treetops on the world's best forest canopy walkways
Jan 8, 2021 鈥 6 min read